Tacit Textuality: Drinking the Qurʾan in Zanzibar Town

Prijzen vanaf
59,99

Uitgelicht

VERGELIJK ALLE AANBIEDERS (3)

Beschrijving

Bol An ethnography about the practice of ingesting the Qur'an as medicine in Zanzibar Tacit Textuality is an ethnography about the practice of kombe in Zanzibar, in which Qurʾanic verses are liquefied and consumed across religious divides for afflicted bodies to be healed. Primarily based on thirteen months of ethnographic fieldwork in two Zanzibari healing rooms, the book investigates three foci. Firstly, it delves into the minute details of preparing kombe--its textual formation through carefully shaped saffron ink, its liquefaction and containment in water, and its anticipated ingestion for healing purposes. Because kombe's textuality is rendered tacit, the book argues, it is possible to be read affectively and thereby provide the conditions for the Qurʾan to heal through afflicted bodies. Secondly, it examines kombe in its social context. In Zanzibar, kombe is both "Islamic" and "traditional" medicine, which caters to both Muslims and Christians. Antagonistic debates that render Christians as Muslims' "other" are complicated by Zanzibar's situatedness between Indian Ocean connections and its status as semi-autonomously belonging to the Tanzanian state. Hanna Nieber traces how, in this context, Christians drink kombe as "traditional medicine" but do not speak about their ingestion. Thirdly, being text about text that is not visually legible anymore, Tacit Textuality connects this ethnographic case study to academic writing and forms a "diffractive ethnography" in which the materiality of the book itself becomes part of the story.

Vergelijk aanbieders (3)

Shop
Prijs
Verzendkosten
Totale prijs
59,99
Gratis
59,99
Naar shop
Gratis Shipping Costs
88,69
Gratis
88,69
Naar shop
Gratis Shipping Costs
88,69
Gratis
88,69
Naar shop
Gratis Shipping Costs
Beschrijving (2)
Bol

An ethnography about the practice of ingesting the Qur'an as medicine in Zanzibar Tacit Textuality is an ethnography about the practice of kombe in Zanzibar, in which Qurʾanic verses are liquefied and consumed across religious divides for afflicted bodies to be healed. Primarily based on thirteen months of ethnographic fieldwork in two Zanzibari healing rooms, the book investigates three foci. Firstly, it delves into the minute details of preparing kombe--its textual formation through carefully shaped saffron ink, its liquefaction and containment in water, and its anticipated ingestion for healing purposes. Because kombe's textuality is rendered tacit, the book argues, it is possible to be read affectively and thereby provide the conditions for the Qurʾan to heal through afflicted bodies. Secondly, it examines kombe in its social context. In Zanzibar, kombe is both "Islamic" and "traditional" medicine, which caters to both Muslims and Christians. Antagonistic debates that render Christians as Muslims' "other" are complicated by Zanzibar's situatedness between Indian Ocean connections and its status as semi-autonomously belonging to the Tanzanian state. Hanna Nieber traces how, in this context, Christians drink kombe as "traditional medicine" but do not speak about their ingestion. Thirdly, being text about text that is not visually legible anymore, Tacit Textuality connects this ethnographic case study to academic writing and forms a "diffractive ethnography" in which the materiality of the book itself becomes part of the story.

Amazon

Pagina's: 256, Hardcover, University of Pennsylvania Press


Productspecificaties

EAN
  • 9781512830088
Maat


Prijshistorie

* Prijshistorie bevat geen data van Amazon, Amazon Marketplace.

Prijzen voor het laatst bijgewerkt op:

Uitgelichte Keuze
59,99
Naar shop